The evening world. Newspaper, January 23, 1911, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Smith, the Democratic leaders, said they Assem- had hear 10, timation f a confer- Candidates. Senate. bly, Total. ie ae Bs mae | | Sheehan 24 2 se be |PBhepara ......, 2 n 1a -- The Vote To-Day. |] Kernan he a \S On the face of the ballot to-di Littleton 1 2 Bheehan was two votes short of that chee : i a \ cast for him last Thursday before men F werricy 1 ¢ ‘ae were excused tn pairs. One of O'Brien 1 these missing votes was that of A Povker 0 L blyman Peter J. Meck!) who was |f DX... ° s 4 bas sf Depew a ol exoused to attend his own wedding, Gov. John ‘A. Dix s added to the Total vote oe list of candidates votet for, He re- |] Necessary for a choice to-day... 99 ‘| celved one vote, tha Assemblyman | sel AR 3 } Y Necessary to a choice on ® full | prised everybody by voting for Sheehan, DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS IS SHOT ___ BY ANARCHIST WHO ENDS OWN LIFE | WEATHER—Fatr to-night and Tue: 7) warmer ——— PRICE ONE CENT. BOLTERS’LINES WAVERING: READY 10 TREAT FOR PEACE No Election To-Day in the Joint Session, but Senator Roosevelt Is Willing to Confer With Murphy. (Special from a Staff Correspo t of The Evening World.) ALBANY, Jan. 23.—After the Legislature had failed again to-day Mto elect a United States Senator in the joint session Senator -scaeted F leader of the bolters, expressed a willingness to go into conference with Charles F. Murphy and try to reach an agreement. This announcement followed the nomination by Gov. Dix of W. W Farley of Binghamton as State Excise Commissioner. Farley is a fol- lower of Charles F. Murphy. His nomination to-day, two months be- fore there will be a vacancy, This fact, in addition to the indications that the insurgents are beginning to waver, give the Sheehanites renewed hope. “I have talked to some of our fel-) — _— said Roosevelt when asked about the possibility of a compromise, “and I 4#:EMHAN DROPS ean ¢ that are ready to go into a TO 86 VOTES ON 7T0-DAiY’S BALLOT: was regarded as significant. conference on ten minutes’ notice. Such a conference can be held to-night if Mr. Murphy will say the word. ‘The Tammany vos does not ar here watt! late this afternoon, and bo Senator Wagner and ; for United 8t Assembiyman | Senator the vot stood as follows Kennedy of Queens County. One more} legislator—Senator Loomis of Buffa al broke away from the caucus in) vote 2101 Ataemblyman La Reau of Buffalo sure MEXICAN T00PS TRAPPED IN HILLS Storm of Bullets From Three though on Saturday he Issued @ state- ment declaring that thereafter his vote would be cast against Sheehan, Shepard to-day regained two insurgent votes, which were given to oter candl- dates after the first ballot. Littleton | also gained ono vote in the Assembly and Parker's former following of seven dwindled to one. Dix Will Not Interfere. @ov. Dix ‘this afternoon reiterated his Statement that he had no advance | knowledge of State Chairman Iuppuci's | Directions Showered on Gesemene. Government Force. “I have no criticism to make of the attitude of Mr. Huppuch,” said the Governor, e PRESIDIO, Tex., Jan, 2 (via Marfa, He repeated that ne proposed to con Ear teg ular Maer apa er ee tinue his attitude oz non-interference | and that he wanted members of the| Legislature in voting on this and all} questions to obey the dictates of their | own consciences and express the will of thelr constituents. The injection of the name of Gov. | were killed in a three-days’ fight be- tween the Mexican federal troops and sin ains between 1 Cuchillio Parrado, troops were caught | nsurr Ojinaga a the mou je BOVE ram to abide by the caucus. He does not know how he will vote to-morrow. AT THE LAST ROLL CALL. Circul: | | Tie ‘ion Books Open to All.”" yy The Prese Publishing jew York World), CROMER CHARGES ~ WIFE HAS HIDDEN $40,000 SAVINGS Gave Her $87,300 Earnings | of Lifetime, to Be Scorned in | | | i | BLAMES Home, Fire Chief Swears. HER CHUMS. ys She Dyed Her Hair, Used pee and Paint Excessively and Frequented Roadhouses. The unhappy life of Fire Chief Fd- ward F, Croker, who {s forced, he says, to lve as @ recluse in the Great Jones Street fire house, with his children and other relatives turned against him, was unfolded to-day before Justice Gerard {n the Supreme Court when a motion was made by Mrs. Ella J. Croker, nis wife, for $500 a month personal allow- ance and $590 counsel fees, pending her sult for separation against the Fire | Chief. Answering Mrs. Croker's claims that Croker reveives a combined salary of $12,000 4 year; that he maintains an ex- Pensive automobile and chauffeur; that he owns stock in several corporations and that before their separation in 1908 ; the Chief had, maintained her in luxuri- ous apartments in the Imperial , Croker set up a long Hat ind responded with a pitiful e has been deserted. His answer is inchided In papers filed by David L. Neuberger, his lawye Says She Saved $87,300. © of his marriage in 1888 1903, Croker claims, he every cent received by y grade of the Fire Depart- until at the time the coupie parted she had accumulated $87,300, which she had deposited in various banks “under ee | in agreement to be in use for me abso- tlons and voted aguinst W. Sheehan. Other breaks-in the She ,Fanks which had been expected did 1 Alevelop. lutely." He has nothing now for all his years of work “except his clothing and his y, and these are heavily morigag his lawyer stated. Because they were ‘frugal in habita, quiet in tastes and not lavish In dress- ing or expenditures,” Croker believes his wife now has at least $40,000 of his savings In banks out of the $87,000 he says he has given her. Scolded at Each Visit. Taking up the coldness of his chil- dren, Robert and Edith, he states that Mrs. Croker would find fault with hi every time his duties in the Fire De- partment ailowed nim to visit his home “She continuously called my atten tion," he says, “in the presence of my children, to other women, and would mention the names of the most rep: itable persons, against’ whom there ‘ould not be a breath of suspicion, and had accepted invitations to dine with gentlement and their she would bring charges of mpropriety against t 8. “When professional women yolun- teered their s PS At any public func tion for the benefit of the Fire Depart ment, their names were invariably Inter- linked with mine on charges of impro- because I wives, hese pers ‘ap and literally mowed down by a , Thompson, Dix was not regarded seriously, but A oe ring that his wife's association |ppompson Inatitute when Kennedy announced PANEL OAL ieiek te . with a woman who “lived in New York | goiyi of Sea Cliff, Le Dix" as his choice there w rector occupled tine ¢ nd mountains [and had no Visible means of support,” Moning institute able excitement. Kennedy and the soldiers were tn the road with PAN OAES Hydeman, has voted for Parker. Tamzany me} their only way of escape blocked. Of ime after time had T repeatedly and |) oy. n declare that he will eventually come! the two hundred men who went into |peristently asked her to discontinue such |e. Goo into the Sheehan camp. He has not|the pass only forty escaped unharmed, |assoctatio: ae ine ia wigned the inaurgent agreement nor has | so far as known ey Joined the co | woman's c ee ted he attended any of their conferenc mn under Col, Dorantes. driving through i ‘The other five nuke had ‘At the close of the session Lareau of | ‘The revolutionists’ logs is said to have | person and stopping at roadhoures, She| The OUh Mail. Tan a Buftalo offered as an explanation of his| Hecn aiignt only five men being killed, | aigo persisted in dyeing her hair, In| "° ne Usa no wobbly attitude the statement that he | #°conding to te nuary, 198, returning home one day, | eer ee inne nets, ane had recely1 a score of telegrams from I found my wife had changed the cotor |! © aie foselenare pews "aént Buffalo business men urging| TO DRINK TOAST TO DEAD | oe ‘her hair. She also commenced the |! Hem were foreigner excessive use of powder Gave Her Lvery Cent. and face paint SECRET SERVE | MEN CAPTURE 20 - IN MEDICAL RAIDS; ;Get Four Wagon Loads ‘of Literature and Medicine Preparations Besides. USE OF MAILS CHARGE. Big Crowds Attracted When Detectives and Police Invade Tenderloin Establishment. Secret Service agents, assisted by! Central OMce detectives and precinct policemen, made spectacular raids this afternoon on two so-called medical in- stitues in the Tenderloin, In all twenty prisoners were taken, along with four patrol wagon loads of advertising mat- ter, iterature, medical preparations and office accounts, The first round-up centred about the Collins Medical Institute at No. 140 West ‘Thirty-fourth street. Post-Office Inspector Kincaid directed the opera tions, With him were two other Gov- ernment inspectors—Sharon and May- haw—a squad of plain clothes men and several policemen in uniform, Shortly after the noon hour a pro- cession of patrol wagons backed up at the curb in froht of the old residence ; where the Collins Institute is located and the raiders swarmed into the build- ing. While a big crowd watched inethe | street the invaders marched out their | captives and then began filling the wagons with confiscated supplies, Woman Left Under Guard. They had a warrant for Mrs. Collins, for whom the establishment is named, but they found her sick in bed with ty- | phoid fever in the living apartments on | the upper floors. ‘They left her there with a policeman on guard, but brought away everybody else they found on the premises who Was in any way connect- ed with the operation of the institute. From Thirty-fourth street the inspec- tors with their police aides hurried down to the James J. Thompson Medical Com- pany, at No, 32 West Twenty-seventh street. Mere the riler scene was re- peated on a slightly smaller scale, but tn the presence of an even larger and more Dr. J. J, Thompson, the proprietor, and his office staff of aix were rounded up and added to the firat batch of cap- tives. Thompson, who despite his name is @ full-blooded Cuban, had a polygto estabiisiiment. Every man in his office @ linguist and one of them knew seven tongues. Ali Released but Eight. While trucks wi conveying the tons of seized supplies and printed matter tu the Federal Building, the patrol wagons with thelr human car goes drove to Headquarters. There the < Were sifted out and all were re- with the exception of eight men, to the Federal Bulld- raignmen Unitet States Commissione charge of using the mails fo before More Arrests Expected. For some time post-office agents nave g testimony again een ¢ Protests Against Sheehan. - peril : 93 ne Brine Wo When I married her she was a sales: | jain 1 medical 1 Legislators returning to Aibany to PHU, AD 4 HIA, Pas Ja The | girl in a dry goods store, on a small | yew York, and it ts proba tor | are much disturbed by the demon ® Philadelphia Grays of Civil| salary, Her f y lived tn a op! iay's arresia will be followed by w tion of their constituents against She will be called to-night for the | fat, 1 hoped when 4 hor and | goog many more Ve han. One up-State man who has voted | last UUme. No one will respond to his | an to turn ov vent of My] According to the evidence already in! for Sheehan declared that 40 people | name, and siffing at a long table, the avy, which T nuary jands of Inspector Kincaid th: called at his house Sunday to demand | chairs around ol e turned | ; ‘ont- of itoas slates Vhat he vote against Sheehan, down, Samucl M, W, Brigys, son of the | dence T A She never had nut under sealed envelopes ad- | State Chairman Huppuch to-day said: | last survivor of the once famous com- ik Teer Car EPTRCPE EER: ertivements of cure alia and 6; “E have nothing to add to my state-| pany, will drink a toast to their m nate ne “oy. hia, son and|temedies which abound in improper pice | mont of yesterday, £ think I defined | ory. | This will be done in fullilling the pe ae F. Croker jr-the|+ and language. | my position pretty clearly. I believe in eying faves his father, who passed | father's tale continues At niBEO hment much party regularity and the rulo of the) Tear aince 196 the survivors of | .,."1 hope £0 he pardoned in mot dis-tine iiterature was printed in foreign |! majority. the Phila met in reunion | ee egy the proper criticiam which | @nsuages being intended for circuly-| Assemblyman Fry of Brooklyn, whom | on the night Year by yea | sou abe Seen Une attitude ca | tion, {t was sald, in the Italian, Grovk | over as the result of pressure from his for some years Sergt Mar 'y riggs de h Cnitomand haved ‘ } Several truck loads of confiscate) | diet’ At organization, this afternoon Is-| was the sole survivor | After hin last | wand much 801 eached the Federal Building | sued a long statement, declaring that panes firs pres iN ae key he reed sof having him make @ name for| shortly after 2 Jock ' he would ignore these demands and cone} roriner prothers-in-arma, While «ilent ionic lad Gh misena ah policemen were left in ¢ ' tinue to vote for Shepard, waiters placed food before him, and (Continued 0 Recond Page) places that had been visited, with or nee poche Bi alecat In response to a rumor that Sheehan | placed it also before each vacant chair, ders to receive any mail that might would be elected by Rapublican votes or | and removed it at the entrance of an-| World Byliding Turkish Hat , [arrive other course, Sergt. Brigg# called the | BLiwt sha” + Guikpudiet “inv sitend: | NO patients were taken Into custody (Continued on Second Page.) roll. ‘ elther at Collins's or Thompson's, 14 PAGES a WEATHER-—fair to-night and Teeedar; warmer PRICE ONE CENT, scare NOVELIST: PHILLIPS SHOT; eee ASSAILANT A SUICIDE Down on Novelist Phillips Who Was Shot Street Near His Clu ROBIN INSANE AUTOS IN GRASH, SAY ALIENISTS ONE BLAZES | IN FIFTH AVENUE District-Attorney Tells of Re- | Banker’s Wife and Two Other WHITMAN CALLED. port as Jerome Asks to Withdraw. G. Robin Indicted y t 1 F 4) orn bw ay that t he f the Jerome Arks to Withdraw fore M. nan M Md Mr. Jeron a ent fense 1 w ained (Continued on Second Page.) Women in Cars—Street Is Blocked. A limoustr 1 shopping ev wa n ‘ani he was p up Fi t " adde ai re I an Me quick! to find 1 go C deal of arrest od nil ekless drivi mobile in which of wu retired banker k Wert, ded with a ame for about Mra was going rtlet eet avenue was tif p burst with ut Hor ut ie eriande that he was being a b 'Fitzhugh Goldborough, Neighbor of the Novelist, Springs Upon Him on Street and Pours Five Bullets Into Him. WOUND IN LEFT BREAST LIKELY TO PROVE MORTAL. Victim Had Told Friends Letter-Writing Crank Was Annoying Him— Tragedy Occurs in Front of Princton Club While Writer Was on Way to Luncheon. David Graham Phillips, the author, was shot and sertously wounded this afternoon on the street in front of the Princeton Club, at Twenty- first street and Lexington avenue, by Fitzhugh Goldborough, a music teacher, of anarchistic tendencies, who lived at the Rand School of ‘Séctal Science, No, 112 East Nineteenth street. Goldborough committed sui- cide after shooting Mr..Phillips five. times. Mr. Phillips was taken to Bellevue Hospital. The surgeons ‘there decided that he had a change for life, although five bullet¢ struck ‘him. His heavy overcoat impeded the bullets. Prof. Hotchkiss of the visiting staff of the hospital operated on the wounded author late this afternoon. He said that the shock of the tragedy had affected Mr. Phillips most seriously. Unless complications set in, Mr. Phil-) room, tt appears that his full name wan lips, who Is athletic, young and in 00d] Fitzhigh Coyle Goldvorough. He lived physical condition, stands better than|in Washington, at No. 1831 K street an even chance for recovery | North West. In his pocket was the Had Ignored Begging Letters. manuscript of 6,00-word story en- The cause of the siootiag is believed | tiled “The Conquest of Climate.” failure tol ording to Willtam nt to nim | F » seeretary of the Prim ton Club, comes of an old and respecte: the street from w Iged, 1 often approw oung Mterary men. )os believes bis mother and gix- now live in Washington, He wi vard man of the class of 1901, according to Mr. MeCombs, did ty 6. patean ene lene ating on finish his course at the university. teat ‘and. begging letter, One| ‘sa cousin of the Gokdborough of the Wltaae pane? matter to{ te firm of Goldborough, Villard & Wil- + yrougi F by "rung month ago Mr. Phillips told | ed | | ter Ho tne police, and Detect! farrell waa) ‘4%, who formeniy occupied’ offices in sent to see Mr. Phillips, | Ploe street. ‘Phe firm afterward became ‘Eo think T kn who i# writing the, Villard, Gifford & Cox, which firm haa scald Mrs, Phillips, ‘ne man | @*> dissolved. Gokthorough, acconfing aute right mentally, but I don't|t® Mr McCombs, made frequent trips there Is any harm in him.) hetween this elty and Washington. sro would be no use in mixing the| Mr. McCombs says te met Goldbor- hing up by an investigation an | OUSD & few weeks ago in a downtowa arrest. [can take care of m . accompanied by a woman, The Goldboroingl, rs, lary says he often talked with watehing a x Mr. Phillips for but never heard him mention any ome thn qt 4 beleved that, in addi » with Phillips. to demanding money from the au iph Aose of No, 51 First avenue hor, he had been sending him manu pine Jacob Jacoby of No, 8 Bast One ript which were rn to fT Hundred and Twelfth street wei toe Tos of the people living at the Rand only eyewitnesses of the shootin, Jn = eo spoke only yesterday of a coby was within fifteen feet of Mr. . on clatned had seen done | Pips and Rose was across the Phillipe, treet, Wondered Why He Was Shot. Delay in Gotting Doctor, Willlam 8, Moffatt of the Moffa so and Ja sisted Mr. Phillips Yard Company, Mr illipa’ “ nent f the Prince rs, was with him whe was] Club. The w Jed author was suffer- nt. He says Goldborough gave no krene pain warning, As the shooting degan Mr me a doctor," he erled. ‘Don't Phillips 1 ask me about who shot me. Murre ep My God that ma voting a vith a dootor, Iam badly wounded." n What is he shooting me for There was si diay in getting a ioldbo # sald to have attended Mr. Phillips remained conselous Harvard University for pa f a tern ip the time he was taken to the Mr) Phillipe lives with his aister; Ae 4) He complained of frightful aroll Frev at the Na al Art aing In the yest and abdomen. 40, ast Ninet t the novellet was his custom to walk y rds found in his eve day to the Prince: Algernon Lee, Secretary of the Gramercy Square fo 1 School yelal Selence, con He waa walking os ed the Identification, He sald Gold. aivkat Meni kia came to this elty from Wash- front of the Princeto: om Nov, 2 1910, wseailan who was dev te hospital the surgeons found on with his habit and st eXamination the marks of fap tila. Fubhed tows: parate Wounds, Mr, Phillips had . n the calf of the right leg. 4 he right wrlst, In the thigh, ia 4 left? hest and In the lower ab- As th nurses were cuttiny MT Lis clothing to prepare him for the im ng tavle two bullets dropped out Which of the wounds these bullets sme from the physicians were una sneeringly got you now ; n thelr hurried preliminary diagnosis haz | to state first bulletin issued by 1 them at the patient was suf- Fine i k and \oss of blood, ed a | ED the rion he was in a very dans 13 Lived in Social Science fehool, ad) The Rand School of Sock Selence ta ; Nin etreet, where Golde old borough's vorough lived, was founded five yeare <a die ee Sie Ale Paes ac

Other pages from this issue: